i
CAROLINA TIMES Sat, Oct. 27, 1973
ma m
REFLECTIONS
FROM NCCU
By Mary Bohanon
We haw no contact with the individual, other than from his
actions and hearsay. We become an authority or a judge at to
what he is, without asking or seeking "Why." It occurs to mo that
man is unable to judge his fellowman's actions. Do we know his
motives? No. We give a man a reputation, but is that his chamcter?
Character consists of the inner man, the capitalized Me which
often a person is reluctant to reveal, because his peers are more
than likely to be short-sighted.
WHO WOULD KNOW?
Water rushed and gushed about me as I sat serenely amid the
turbulence of the incoming waves. Lost in tranquility, I was
oblivious to the confusion of waves vying to be the first to slap
my insensate body. Scattered thought-remnants and puffs of
clouds drifted lazily through the periphery of my languid mind...
Briefly I roused from my languor to resettle my body in the
hand-dug depression in the sand. 1 wriggled slightly, ignoring the
gritty, scratching sand. There. Much better. Clasped my hands
behind my bead. Shook my shoulders. Snug. Relaxed. Closed my
eyes. Sensed the warm, then hot-too hot-glow on my eyelids.
Adjusted my cap to shad them. Cool darkness ensued; a respite
from the searing sun.
Minutes passed me by, I, unaware of them. Aware only of the
caress of wavelets soothing my sunburned skin, soothing my spirit
as well. I lapsed into a reverie, the substance unmemoried.
Drugged with dreaminess I nodded, then drowsed....
Slowly an annoying sensation crept into my
semi-consciousness. Vague. But insistent. I stirred, displeased at
the intrusion. I attempted to ignore it. In vain. The sensation
persisted. Then abruptly it defined itself. Mucous. Clammy. I
jerked from half sleep with a start. Wide-awake I stared at the
source of my discomfort- a bloated dead fish lying alongside my
leg. I recoiled with revulsion. Trepidatiously I picked it up by it's
slimy tail and flung it away. I resolved to leave immediately.
Irritated, I strode across the beach and up the dune. At the top, I
paused,- turned to view once more the scene where I had spent
such a pleasant, satisfying day. The sandy shoreline and the
sparkling sea stretching to meet the sky at the edge of infinity
caused me to linger, bade me to return. I half-turned to leave but
a realization unbidden, came to me and made me stop. The fish
was gone. I looked closer. Yes . . . yes, and so was my hand-dug
depression. Not a sign to show that the fish or I had ever been
there. We had vanished along that shoreline stretching toward
infinity... Who would know I had been scorched by the sun or
that a fish once lay dead on the sand? Who would knoWAnd why
should anyone care?
Mark W. Kenas
MY MOTHER
None is more worthy of angelic praise
Than that Image of Madonna granted to me
By the Almighty.
With lined face,
Scared hand,
And wearied heart,
The loveliest figure known
Bears the name My Mother.
How weary her life has been since my beginning.
Bringing less joy and more tears,
Still she loves me endlessly-
I am her child.
Born of her flesh,
In her image,
She is my dearest friend, my guiding star MY MOTHER.
Gloria Harris
DORIS
You, Doris,
Were born with Aphrodite's girdle
About your loins.
You trap desire
In your lacey chains,
Perform the rituals of love
In your humble temple.
You,
High priestess of Eros,
Embrace the world
With your love nest.
Your body is a flowing stream
For all who would drink from it,
An oasis to those who wander.
v You,
Sensuous prophet
Of erotic charity,
Convert disciples
Club
If you like a blend
..this is it!
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Upon the dewy ' '
Pillows of your. bed. Hrl
Lustful saint, 7.
Holy harlot, tjp
Yours is no greater sin than Eve's.
Robert Earl Graham
Thinking of a Lady
mmmm
I've once again heard the Chimes of Her
She Looks like a Lady
She Walks like a Lady
She Talks like a Lady
I believe, She is a Lady
Pve once again heard the Chimes of Her
She Looks like a Lady
She Walks like a Lady
She Talks like a Lady
Her style is like no other Lady so rare within.
I've once again heard the Chimes of Her
She Looks like a Lady
She Walks like a Lady
She Talks like a Lady
I know, She is a Lady
She is not a Mirage.
Vanzell Woodard
"WITHOUT"
Have you ever been lonely?
So lonely that time stood still,
And for one moment you were nothing.
Have you ever been lonely?
So lonely that you could walk into a crowded room,
But never once were you touched by the mere existence
of another soul.
Have you ever been lonely?
And you reached out from within,
To grasp a meaning of your voidness.
Have you ever been lonely?
To want just to have something or someone,
Close to you but not about you.
Have you ever been loney?
Watching a twinkling star dancing in brilliance,
And feeling such delight never to be resurrected.
Have you ever been lonely?
Like a single cloud in the sky,
Floating to an unforeseen destiny.
Have you ever been lonely?
Crying out a plea for solitude,
To become one within one's self.
Have you ever been lonely?
Without concept, without purpose, without being,
Have you ever been lonely?
Ronald Harrison
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UNDECIDED NOW - Pixyish Phyllis Amons, a freshman from
East Cleveland, Ohio, is undecided as to what she will major in at
Livingstone College, Salisbury. She was convinced to come to
Livingstone by the college's band director, Henry A. Duncombe,
and if he is any judge of talent, and indeed he is, Phyllis promises
to be an outstanding baton twirler this year with the Livingstone
College Marching Band.
CPSC LAUNCHES A NATIONWIDE
CAMPAIGN FOR TOY SAFETY
WASHINGTON, D. C. -The
Consumer Product Safety
Commission recently
announced a nationwide toy
safety campaign to get banned
toys off toy shelves and to
inform consumers about
possible hazards associated
with toys.
More than 150,000
different kinds of toys are sold
in toy shops and toy
departments across' the
country. The Federal
Government has banned some
1,500 toys, but some of these
dangerous toys may still be
found for sale.
Each year, an estimated
132,000 toy-related injuries are
serious enough to be treated in
hospital emergency rooms. Jf
Seventy to eighty percent
of all toys are purchased during
the months of October;
November, and December, and
the Commission will give
priority attention to toy safety
during the holiday season.
To assist consumers in
identifying dangerous toys and
to encourage the purchase of
safe toys, the Commission has
designed toy safety
coordinators in each of the
Commission's 14 regional
offices. The toy coordinator
will be available to answer
questions from consumers and
business men and to speak
before community
organizations concerned about
toy safety.
Radio and television public
service announcements in both
English and Spanish and
posters in U. S. Post Offices
will be used to inform the
public about dangers present in
some toys. A color and sound
film, "Can You Pass the Toy
Safety Test," will be available
to local groups through CPSC
regional offices. Copies of a
leaflet, "Toy Safety: Always in
Season," and the CPSC Banned
Products List are available
from regional offices and the
Commission's Washington
headquarters at no cost.
' The Consumer Product
Safety Commission, under the
authority of the Federal
Hazardous Substances Act, can
bap certain categories of
dangerous toys. On October 1,
CPSC regional inspectors began
a nationwide preholiday
inspection program to insure
compliance with the Banned
Products List.
... At llderton Dodge!
Close-Out Prices
On remaining brand new 1973 Dodge &
Dodge trucks on our lots.
NEAR FACTORY
INVOICE PRICES
on all these units!
CHOOSE FROM: Monacos
Polaras Chargers
Challengers Darts
Pickups & Vans And many more!
Large Selection in Stock! -
MATE, These remaining 1973 Dodges
II HI C musj be sold f0 mqce room for
incoming 74 models! Hurry, they won't last!
"Extra Care Everyuhere"
ILDERT0N DODGE
5m 0a of Our
friendly Suksmen
"Over 47 Years with Dodge ff fj' :x.
Gene Oakley Ken Williams
John Owens Bill Vinton
Jin try Young John Ferguson
806 W. Main St. 2896 Dial 682-5787
The largest islands In the
world are Greenland, with an
area of 840,000 square miles,
and New Guinea, with 305,577
square miles.
People who worry about
the "next war" might give a
few thoughts to driving care
fully. -
There's an art in sayuig;. -no
that makes all the differ
ence to the person hearing
it.
FRAZIER REALTY CO, i
2 1108V, 8. ROXBORO ST. DURHAM, N. C
"Specializing in Residential Sales
and Property Management"
S Houses
I.. I ..11. f. .11 L t I .1 , .
g uuvciy new no use wim iuii uasciuciii, i. uaiiu, o mis.
1 Can be purchased S27.850
! Beautiful new brick, 6 rms. 1 16 bath, excellent location.
county taxes, an ideal starter, 10 down S23.80O
ai
:
:
:
Nothing down VA loan, economically priced, conveniently
located, 5 rms. brick & frame, I Vi bath S22.900
9 Commeiical property in the heart of Fayetteville St.
Business District S22.000
1 Lots
Want to build that dream home? We have the MM
Located on EBON Rd. off Barbee Rd. 1 50 X 272 S4000
For details call 544-3020 n ;t
2 Lots on Mimosa Sr. 75 X 300 and 100 X 300 each S2000
To
inspect these properties, CALL: Office 682-1 306
Res. 544-3020
489-6793
Staff:
Ralph Hester
James Black
R. L. Frazier
Fred Ruff in
Doris Marsh
Be COMMUNITY oriented. Call us for your
REAL ESTATE NEEDS1
WE'RE STILL
LOADED WITH
73' SI
OVER TOO LEFT
THE 74'S ARE
HERE, GREAT
SELECTION
Jmi Say "Charge It"
BRAND NEW 73 CHEVELLE
i
HffojlH tar"
350 V8, Air condition,
hydramatic, power
steering, radio, mold
ing, power brakes, tin
ted glass.
List S3889.95
Discount $600.95
3289
v iHHMsHH
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OPEN til 9 P.M.
600 East Main St.
Downtown
Phone 682-045!
1974 PONTIAC
Better Than Ever
In Comfort, Handling
And Engineering!
BONNEVILLE 4-DOOR HARDTOP
Pontlac's Classic Road Car Is Back!
NEW '74 PONTIAC
BONNEVILLE
This is what luxury for 1974 is all about. The fantastic new Bonneville. Tbte one
comes equiipped with factory air conditioning, power, disc brakes, Turbo Hydra
matic transmission, cordova top, whitewaU tires, stereo radio!, Rally aport wheels,
chrome moulding decor group, body protector group, power windows, power seats,
tinted glass all around and much, much morel
5375
Highway Between Durham and Chapel Hill on 15-501 H way
Open Daily 'til 9 P.M.; Saturday 'tU 8 P.M.; Closed Sunday
Ljjjj mt'r:f
CoggliPPontiac
I i Honda Volvo-Mazda
ini f I r l Utfl MsmI hi. sou
Saturday, October 27, 1973
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VOLUME 53 - Nk 44
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TO BE CROWNED Jacqueline Bacchus, Miss JSC 1973-74, wiU
be crowned during Coronation ceremonies Thursday, October 25,
at 8 p.m. in College Park Auditorium. Miss Bacchus is a senior
political science major from Olive Branch, Mississippi.
Coronation Ceremonies Planned
For Miss Jackson State College
JACKSON, MISS. -The
charming Miss Jackson State
College will be crowned in
elegant ceremonies Thrusday,
October 25, in College Park
Auditorium. The ceremonies
will begin at 8:00 p.ni-
Jacqueline Bacchus, Miss
Jackson State College 1973-74,
is a senior political science
major from Oliver Branch,
Mississippi. She is the daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. T.G. Bacchus,
NiT regal fraMftaWtf?
dean's list scholar. She alio
holds membership in the
Emanuel Club, Dunbar
Dramatics Guild, Political
Science Club, Pre-Law Club,
Political Science Curriculum
Committee, Alpha Psi Omega
Dramatic Fraternity and
ROTC.
While attending Jackson
State College, Jacqueline has
served as freshman editor of
the Jack soman yearbook.
student leader for freshman
orientation, vice-president of
her sophomore class and Miss
Dunbar Dramatics Guild
1972-73.
Jacqueline also represented
Jackson State College in the
22nd Annual Southern
Regional Press Institute for
college and high school
publications in Savannah,
Georgia.
Sk Cojronatiop is
expected to be the most
spectacular event of the season.
The theme this year is
"Sophistication '73" and the
attire is formal.
The entire public is invited
to join the Jackson State
College family and friends in
celebrating the formal
beginning of a beautiful and
successful reign of the queen,
Miss Jackson State College.
ri.ii!!- r-j- i
Mieiine Miray
Offers New
Look at NCCU
A satellite counseling service
at North Carolina Central
University offers NCCU
students a chance to talk to a
trained counselor after office
hours and in a different
atmosphere.
Counseling Outreach
through Peer Encounter
(COPE) is what the program is
called. It is staffed by young
graduate students, ail in
advance stages of training as
counselors, and is conducted
from 7 p.m. to 10 p.m.
Monday through Friday in the
Alfonso Elder Student Union.
Five counselors, including
Miss Sally Sims, Miss Lovettia
Forney, Miss Jenny Horton,
Vincent Sweet, and Miss
Marilyn Merritt, are the
program's staff. They are under
the direct supervision of Dr.
Glen Martin, director of the
NCCU Counseling Center and a
licensed Counseling,
psychologist.
One of the graduate student
counselors is on duty each
evening. The counselor has
access, by telephone, to other
professional counselors. Joseph
Dempsey, Mrs. Betty Merritt,
Mrs. Joan Tillman, and Dr.
Martin of the Counseling
Center staff serve as back-up
personnel, as does Miss Sims,
who is also employed in the
Counseling Center.
In addition, Mrs. Phyllis
Shumate, a residence hall
counsels students in the
university's Academic Skills
program, and the Rev. Robert
Murray, a religious counselor,
are on call.
In addition, a "hot line"
service is offered to those
su dents who do not whish to
face a .counselor with their
problems. "Students facing
problems with drugs or trying
to cope with personal crises
may feel less threatened to call
in by phone and findjielp,
"Dr. Martin said."
DURHAM, N. C SATURDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1973
. . r ju i . -
&9as aaaain' ?SSbRs
Baf'"
VETERAN EDUCATOR
HONORED - Walter T.
Johnson, Sr. of Greensboro,
longtime state and national
leader in agricultural
education, has been honored
with the VIP Citation
presented by the Future
Farmers of America. The
award was presented at Hie
FFA convention in Kansas
City, Mo.
The hot line currently goes
through the university's
switchboard, 682-2171. Callers
may ask for extension 495 to
reach the counselor.
NorfolkState
Notes American
Educ Week
NORFOLK - A daily noon
assembly in the Little Theater
will highlight the observance of
American Education Week at
Norfolk State College, October
22-26.
The theme of the week-long
program is "Get Involved" and
it begins Monday, October 22,
with Attorney Hillary Jones of
Norfolk, a member of the State
School Board, as the main
speaker.
Other speakers will be W. H.
Mackey, superintendent of the
Charles City County schools,
Tuesday, October 23; Dr. Paul
Fink, chairman, Department, of
Psychiatry v Eastern Virgin!
Medical College, whose subject
will be "Psychological
Parameter and Getting
Involved," Wednesday,
October 24; and Roscoe
Brown, an outstanding physical
education professor currently
serving as director, Institute of
Afro-American Affairs, New
York University, who will close
out the week on Friday,
October 26.
Gastonia Man
Reappointed
Bonds Chrmn.
Plato P, Pearson, Jr.,
President, The Citizens
National Bank in Gastonia, is
reappointed Banking Chairman
of the North Carolina State
Savings Bonds Committee. The
appointment, effective October
11, is announced recently by
Bland W. Worley, President,
The Wachovia Corporation,
and Volunteer State Chairman
for Savings Bonds.
Mr. Pearson is also again
named by the American
Bankers Association as Its
North Carolina State Savings
Bonds Coordinator.
The North Carolina Savings
Bonds Committee coordinates
statewide volunteer activities
promoting the sale of U. S.
Savings Bonds. Leaders in
banking, business, government,
industry, labor, media, and the
professions constitute the
group.
Mr. Pearson has served as
coordinator between the
Committee and the banking
community, while directing
ABA activities stimulating
v support for U. S. Savings
Bonds by bankers throughout
the state.
"I have found the past year
an exciting and rewarding
experience," Mr. Pearson said.
"In my travels across the state,
I have had the distinct privilege
of meeting and working with
people from the diverse sectors
of the communities of our
state. We have joined together
to make more people aware of
the benefits of U. S. Savings
Bonds, not just for the
individual buyer, though they
(Continued on Page 7B)
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Abolish yes
Committee,
NAACP Urges
WASHINGTON. Clarence
Mitchell, director of the
NAACP Washington Bureau of
the National Association for
the Advancement of Colored
People, has called for the
abolition of the powerful and
obstructive Rules Committee
of the U.S. House of
Representatives, labelling the
Committee's function as
"excess bagage at this period of
modern history."
Mr. Mitchell documented
his charges against the Rules
Committee at a hearing of the
House Select Committee on
Committees here, Oct. 10. The
Select Committee was created
by the House to "conduct a
thorough and complete study
with respect to the operation
and implementation of Rules X
and XI of Rules of the House
of Representatives." Mr.
Mitchell, representing both the
NAACP and the Leadership
Conference of Civil Rights,
appeared before the
Committee with Joseph L.
Rauh, Jr., a member of the
NAACP Board of Directors and
the Leadership Conference of
which he is the general counsel.
Citing examples of the
Riles Committee's record of
thwarting civil rights legislation
from 1945 through 1968, Mr.
Mitchell told the Select
Committee that "this long and
amazing list of negative action
by the Rules Committee"
reveals "its power to prevent
positive action on civil rights.
This picture changed for the
worst in 1972 when the
Committee exerted pressures
on the House Judiciary
Committee and the House
Labor Committee to force
action on so-called anti-busing
legislation. This legislation, of
course, was designed to nullify
Supreme Court Decisions
implementing desegregation of
the public schools." ,
The NAACP legislative
representative further said: "It
is grossly unjust to the people
of our country to vest so much
power in the Rules Committee
whatever may have been the
function of the Rules
Committee in the past, it is
excess baggage at this period in
modern history. Fortunately,
the present chairman of the
Rules Committee, Mr. Ray J.
Madden of Indiana, has
prevented obstruction and
other members of the
Committee are also disposed to
act constructively instead of
putting bills in deep freeze.
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STUWENTS CHAT WITH EDITOR - Salisbury: Pictured second from right, talking with students is
Alex Poinsett senior staff editor of Ebony magazine. Poinsett addressed recent convocation at
Livingstone College at Salisbury. To Poinsett's left is Phyllis Amons. Others from left are Jewell
McKee, Delores Ballenger and John Dillingham
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ST. AUG. PRINCIPALS CHAT DURING THE 107TH CONVOCATION - Left to right: Dr. Prezell
R. Robinson, president, Saint Augustine's College, chats with the Right Reverend Thomas A. Fraser,
D. D. Bishop of North Carolina and chairman of the Board of Trustees; William R. Knight, director of
Public Relations; Daniel McNair, senior history major from Fort Lauderdale, Florida; and Helen
Carter, iunior. English maior. from Portsmouth. Va.. student representatives on the board. The
occasion was the 107th Formal Opening Convocation of Saint Augustine's College on October 15.
NROTC Scholarships Deadline Nearing
End
Black high school graduates
are reminded that the deadline
for applying for Naval Reserve
Officer Training Corps
scholarships is November 1.
Applicants must have
arranged to take one of two
college board exams, the
results of which must be
forwarded to the Navy-Marine
Corps Scholarship Program,
Iowa City, Iowa.
The college board tests, the
Scholastic Aptitude Test, or
SAT, and the American College
Test, ACT, .re the two
acceptable tests. Deadline for
arranging to take these tests
was October 11.
Graduates and seniors who
are otherwise eligible may
apply through any local Navy
recruiter.
The scholarships provide for
four years of college tuition
paid by the Navy plus a
$ 1 00 a month living allowance,
uniforms, and other fees
required of full-time college
students.
Selectees will be enrolled in
the Naval Reserve and
appointed to the rank of
midshipmen upon entering
college. There are 56 colleges
and universities from which to
choose, including five
predominantly black colleges.
Last year there were 43
black and other minority
students selected for
scholarships, plus 14 women
selectees.
The Navy hopes to increase
the number of black men and
women serving as officers,
through such programs as the
NROTC scholarships.
Currently 805 blacks are on
duty as Navy officers, holding
every rank from warrant
J officer through rear admiral.
TRAINING IN U.S. - Daniel Chibabila, (right) an equipment service representative of Kodak
(Zambia) Limited, Ndola. Zambia, receives instructions in Un- repair of Kodak microfilming
equipment at the Eastman Kodak Company Marketing Education Center in Rochester, N. Y.
Chibabila, the first Zambian staff member of the Kodak International Photographic Division to be
sent to the U. S. for advanced training, recently completed an intensive six-week course at the
Marketing Education Center in the repair and maintenance of equipment used in microfilm handling
systems. Instructor is Carl Puckett, Customer Equipment Services Division, at the Marketing
Education Center.
Mayor Endorses Halloween Safety Program
Tuskeegee Gets
Grant For New
Admin. Building
Tuskegee Institute will
begin construction of a new
Administration Building within
the next eighteen months.
Because of the growth of the
Institute, the 70-year old
structure currently serving
administrative offices can no
longer fit their special
requirements.
The new Administration
Building will serve as a center
for all central administrative
services and facilitate improved
coordination of these services.
Construction of the new
Administration Building will be
made possible through a
$650,000 grant from the
Kresge Foundation, to be
authorized in January 1974. A
second grant of $650,000 is
expected in January 1975. The
building was designed by Paul
Rudolph, FAIA, as part of an
overall campus Master Plan for
Tuskegee Institute. John
Chase, AIA, of Houston,
Texas, is the architect.
Melvin A. Glasser, Chairman
of the Tuskegee Institute
Board of Trustees, and
President Luther H. Foster
expressed great satisfaction for
the generosity of the Kresge
Foundation, which will make
funds available for this
much-needed Administration
Building.
A Halloween Safety
Program, designed to preserve
the best aspects of the age-old
"trick-or-treat" tradition for
the children of Durham has
been officially endorsed by the
city's Mayor, James R.
Hawkins, according to Lt.
Allen.
The plan, which employs
the Halloween Safety Rules of
the National Safety Council,
provides parents with a set of
guidelines for protecting the
safety of youngsters who take
part in the annual Halloween
custom of masquerading in
costumes while visiting
neighbors to collect carfBy and
other treats.
The afternoon hours of
Halloween, Wednesday,
October 31, is the period
officially designated by Mayor
Hawkins for "trick-or-treat"
visits in Durham, Lt. Allen
said.
On that day, residents
wishing to cooperate are
requested to keep their porch
or exterior lights on as an
indication of their willingness
to welcome young visitors and
offer them treats. Children are
encouraged to call only at the
lighted homes of neighbors
whom they know.
Other safety tips offered by
Mayor Hawkins to young
"spooks" and "goblins"
planning to participate in
Halloween "trick-or-treat"
activities, October 31, include
the following: (1) Bring your
parents or other responsible
adults along on your visits; (2)
Stay within your own
immediate neighborhood; (3)
Accept only wrapped or sealed
treats; (4) Bring your goodies
home to be inspected before
tasting them; (5) Wear
light-colored Halloween
costumes decorated with
reflective tape for greater
visibility; (6) Do not wear
Halloween masks since they
tend to restrict vision; (7) Use
flashlights after dark; (8) If
you carry a pumpkin, light it
with a flashlight, not a candle.
The Mayor also urged
children to observe the
National Safety Council's basic
rules of pedestrian safety on
Halloween: (1) Cross only at
comers, never between parked
cars, never diagonally across an
(Continued on Page 7B)
JOB FAIR AT FSU - Milton Yarboro, (extreme right) Placement Director "J
University and Dr. Grace C. Black, Chairman of the Department of Business Adminietiaiww mm
Eduction at FSU, talk with two former atudente now employed by local lodustri-J "W"
programs. The "1 6 grads (from left) Terrence Murchinson and Elnora Freeman talked with students at
the Job Fair on tho FSU campus about careers in industries.